BANKING REGULATION IN MEXICO: LESSONS FROM FINANCIAL CRISES*

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1 BANKING REGULATION IN MEXICO: LESSONS FROM FINANCIAL CRISES* Karen B. Sigmond** Abstract. This article first provides a survey of recent Mexican banking history. It then analyzes the causes that led to the peso crisis (1995) and the banking crisis that came after as well as the government response, the bank bailout, and the role of international financial organizations. Regulatory reforms of the Mexican financial system are also discussed. These provide the background for comparative analysis with the financial crisis ( ) that initiated in the United States of America. Both crises are compared and contrasted, both in terms of the causes leading to them and the regulatory responses by the governments. Finally, by studying the similarities and differences, lessons are drawn from both cases. Key Words: Banking regulation, Financial crisis, Bank bailouts, Mexican peso crisis, U.S. financial crisis. Resumen. El presente artículo versa sobre la historia reciente del sistema bancario mexicano. Se analizan las causas que originaron la crisis del peso (1995) y la subsecuente crisis bancaria. También se analizan las medidas tomadas por el gobierno ante el fallo del sistema bancario, así como el papel desempeñado por las organizaciones financieras internacionales. Lo anterior sirve como telón de fondo para realizar un análisis comparado con la crisis financiera de los Estados Unidos ( ). Ambos episodios son comparados en términos de las causas que los originaron, así como las medidas regulatorias impuestas por los respectivos gobiernos. Finalmente, del análisis del contraste entre las semejanzas y diferencias de ambos casos, se infieren recomendaciones generales para aplicar en casos similares. Palabras clave: regulación financiera, crisis financiera, rescate bancario, crisis del peso mexicano, crisis financiera estadunidense. * A previous draft of this paper was presented at the 6th Global Administrative Law Seminar, The Financial Crisis and the Global Regulatory Governance, Viterbo, Italy, June 11, 12, ** Director of the Masters in International Law Program at the Tecnológico de Monterrey (ITESM), Mexico City Campus. Her PhD and LLM are from Tulane University School of Law, JD from the University of San Diego School of Law, member of the California Bar Association. 3

2 4 MEXICAN LAW REVIEW Vol. IV, No. 1 Table of Contents I. Introduction... 4 II. The Evolution of Mexican Banking... 4 III. The Mexican Peso Crisis and Bank Bailout ( ) The Peso Crisis The Banking Crisis and Bailout International Loans and Conditions for Reforms Reforms in Mexican Financial Laws IV. Global Financial Crisis, The 2008 Crisis Comparison of 1995 Crisis to that of Impact of Global Crisis on Mexican Banking V. Learning from Financial Crises Mexico s Reactions to the Recent Crisis Lessons Learned VI. Conclusions I. Introduction Over the last decade, the impact of globalization on financial markets, specifically banking, has led to an increased need to understand financial systems throughout the world. This article seeks to examine the Mexican financial system, and specifically the banking sector. It first addresses the recent evolution of banking history in Mexico, covering recent significant events. In doing so, it follows the changes in economic policy, particularly in trade and investment, to analyze the effects of a more liberalized market in the banking sector. The second part of this article examines the Mexican Peso Crisis, the bank bailout, and the effects these events have had on regulation. In the third section, the global financial crisis of is studied and compared with the Mexican experience of Finally, past and recent experiences are used to draw lessons from the different responses to financial crises. II. The Evolution of Mexican Banking In Mexico, the development and regulation of the banking sector have had several phases. 1 The recent history of Mexican banking, which will be ad- 1 For an in depth analysis of the different phases in the development of Mexican banks, see Karen B. Sigmond, Mexican Banking Laws, Evolution into NAFTA and the Global Economy, VDM Verlag (2008).

3 BANKING REGULATION IN MEXICO... 5 dressed for purposes of this paper, begins with the expropriation of the banks in Several decades of expansion in banking from the 1940s-1960s, during the Mexican Economic Miracle, had led to robust growth in this sector. 2 The total assets of private institutions in the banking system grew by 3,259 percent from 1940 to 1960, from million pesos to 28, million pesos. 3 However, the decade that followed brought inflation and a slowdown in the economy. Inflation went from 3.91% in 1970 to 24.79% in Other factors such as government overspending, a series of devaluations, and capital flight began to complicate the economic outlook at the end of the 1970s. In banking, a series of mergers took place, 5 and despite the worsening economic conditions, the profits of the four principal banks increased in pesos, more than 1156% from 1977 to By 1982, the government was facing an economic crisis and someone had to be blamed. As capital flight increased, the government turned its attention to the banks. On September 1, 1982, 58 out of the 60 banks in Mexico were nationalized by the Mexican government. 7 The José Lopez-Portillo ( ) administration nationalized its banking system to stem the flight of wealth from Mexico and to provide Mexicans with greater access to capital. President Lopez-Portillo contended that Mexico s economic crisis had been exacerbated by the greed of private banks and the lack of central control over the nation s banking system. 8 With this action, decades of banking development and expertise came to a screeching halt. The next administration, Miguel de la Madrid ( ), faced the sobering prospect of inheriting the leadership of a country beset with economic problems so serious that they threatened to disrupt social order. 9 As early as his second day in office, he sent a bill to the Congress to open a new economic chapter in the constitution [ ] But, only three months after the expropriation of private banks, this measure was seen as one following the 2 See Leopoldo Solís, Evolución financiera de México (Mexican Financial Evolution) 43 (1967). 3 Sigmond, supra note 1, at Instituto Nacional de Estadística, Geografía e Informática (INEGI, National Institute for Statistics, Geography and Informatics), (last visited May 10, 2010). 5 From 1975 to 1982, the number of banks dropped from 139 to 60. See Sigmond, supra note 1, at Carlos M. Nalda, Nafta, Foreign Investment, and the Mexican Banking System, 26 Geo. Wash. J. Intl l., L & Econ. 379, 385 (1992). 7 Decreto que Establece la Nacionalización de la Banca Privada (Nationalization Decree), Diario Oficial de la Federación [D.O.], Sept. 1, 1982 (Mex.). 8 Nalda, supra note 6, at Michael C. Meyer & William L. Sherman, The Course of Mexican History, 684 (Oxford University Press, 1995).

4 6 MEXICAN LAW REVIEW Vol. IV, No. 1 same state-centered economic path. 10 In regards to the nationalization of the banks, his hands were tied because of political reasons. The PRI had approved this action and a quick reversal of the decree would have had high political costs. 11 Thus, the necessary constitutional reforms and legal reforms were moved forward for a nationalized banking system. Articles 25 through 28 of the Constitution of the Mexican Republic were amended to make banking and credit services an activity reserved exclusively to the State. Laws were passed to implement the decree. Austerity measures were implemented, and banks were merged. 12 And, towards the second half of this administration, trade and investment regulation shifted from a protectionist, closed economy towards an outward looking economy with Mexico s participation in the multilateral negotiations and its admission into the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT). 13 This set the stage for the next administration and a major shift for the banking sector. The Carlos Salinas de Gortari administration ( ) completely shifted economic and trade policy in Mexico. The liberalization movement was put on fast track. Despite Salinas later arguments, 14 many of the policy recommendations, known as the Washington Consensus, were implemented in Mexico during this period. 15 Thus, with Mexico in GATT, Salinas looked to the possibility of a free trade agreement with its northern neighbors. During the negotiations of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), 16 many state-owned companies were put on sale, including the banks. 17 However, Mexico was aware that it had to protect the recently privatized banking sec- 10 Francisco Valdés Ugalde, The Changing Relationship between the State and the Economy in Mexico, in Changing Structure of Mexico, Political, Social, and Economic Perspectives 58 (Laura Randal, ed., Armonk: M. E., Sharpe, 1996). 11 See Carlos Elizondo Mayer-Serra, La expropriación bancaria veinte años después, in Cuando el Estado se hizo banquero. Consecuencias de la nacionalización bancaria en México, 133 (Gustavo A. del Ángel et al. coords., Fondo de Cultura Económica, 2005). 12 See Sigmond, supra note 1, at See Charles T. DuMars, Liberalization of Foreign Investment Policies in Mexico: Legal Changes Encouraging New Direct Foreign Investment, 21 N.M.L. Rev. 251, 255 ( ). 14 See Carlos Salinas de Gortari, La década perdida Neoliberalismo y populismo en México (Debolsillo, 2010). 15 John Williamson, What Washington Means by Policy Reforms, in Latin American Adjustment. How Much Has Happened? (John Williamson ed., Peterson Institute for International Economics, 2010), available at (last visited Feb. 11, 2011). In this document, Williamson summarizes the 10 topics that Washington considered important, including: fiscal deficits (discipline); public expenditure priorities; tax reform; interest rates; exchange rate, trade policy; foreign direct investment; privatization; deregulation; and property rights. In response to the debt crisis of the 1980s, many Latin American countries, including Mexico, implemented reforms urged upon them by Washington in these key areas. 16 North American Free Trade Agreement, U.S.-Can.-Mex., Dec. 17, 1992, 32 I.L.M See Lynn V. Foster, A Brief History of Mexico (Book, 1997) (The biggest sales were the

5 BANKING REGULATION IN MEXICO... 7 tor. Consequently, Chapter 14 of NAFTA 18 and the Foreign Investment Law (FIL) of were restrictive of foreign investment in this sector. Nonetheless, Mexico sent clear signals to the international community that it was open for business and for investment. All indications pointed to an open economy that had gone beyond protectionism, to a market economy where the government s intervention would be reduced. Economic indicators looked promising and expectations were high. NAFTA was to be implemented on January 1, 1994, and assured a positive outlook for Mexico. Few expected what followed. III. The Mexican Peso Crisis and Bank Bailout ( ) The Peso Crisis and bank bailout that followed had many contributing factors to consider. This part will highlight some important elements of both. It will also survey the rescue package that resulted from this situation and the conditions placed by international loans that played a key role to establish a more regulated banking system. The adjustments made then could have, in large part, contributed to a stronger banking system better able to handle future shocks. 1. The Peso Crisis The Peso Crisis must be studied from different perspectives. First, Mexico had initiated a series of economic reforms that placed it on the trade liberalization path since the late 1980s. The negotiation of a major trade agreement with the United States and Canada indicated that Mexico was ready to open up its markets. Negotiations proceeded for two years with improving economic data in Mexico being published. 20 Ultimately, NAFTA was signed on December 17, The government had to find new ways to entice the capital inflows required for economic recovery and sustained growth. 21 To demonstrate the success in attracting capital one can observe investor trends based on investor confidence. Between 1983 and 1989, Mexico expebanks and the only telephone company (Telmex). Approximately 400 state-owned companies were put on sale). 18 According to NAFTA, the aggregate capital limit for commercial banks owned by foreign investors started at 8% in 1994 and the limit was to increase to 15% in See Section B of the Party s Schedule to Annex VII. See also discussion of restrictions in Sigmond, supra note 1, at Ley de Inversión Extranjera [L.I.E.], [Foreign Investment Law], Diario Oficial de la Federación [D.O.], Dic. 27, 1993 (Mex.). To be discussed below. 20 Sigmond, supra note 1, at 62 (inflation rate went from percent in 1983 to 7.5 percent in 1994); id. at 80-1 (foreign investment grew and the exchange rate was under control). 21 Nora Lustig, Mexico, The Remaking of an Economy 134 (The Brookings Institution, 1998).

6 8 MEXICAN LAW REVIEW Vol. IV, No. 1 rienced net capital outflows of $15 billion, reflecting the impact of the 1982 Debt Crisis, but this reversed to net inflows of $102 billion between 1990 and 1994, signaling the perceived effectiveness of its domestic and international actions. 22 Apparently, Mexico was on the right track and it became one of the leading places to invest. In 1993, Mexico received $31 billion of capital inflows accounting for 20 percent of net capital flows to all LDCs [least developed countries]. 23 Investment flows speedily directed themselves into Mexico, but, other factors quickly changed that direction. The other factors were not necessarily economic. Social and political factors quickly impacted the economy. The most relevant events are the following: 1) January 1, 1994, Guerilla Uprising: On the day that NAFTA was to take effect, a relatively unknown guerrilla movement calling itself the [ ] Ejército Zapatista de Liberación Nacional, (EZLN) [ ] seized control of three cities in the southern state of Chiapas. 24 Political stability in Mexico was questioned by the international community. 2) March 23, 1994, the assassination of presidential candidate, Luis Donaldo Colosio, from the ruling party, PRI, during a campaign appearance in the border city of Tijuana, Baja California. 25 3) September 28, 1994, the murder of the Senate majority leader, José Francisco Ruiz Massieu. 26 4) The election year in which the opposition was gaining ground and social discontent was more present. The impact of the above events was felt immediately. In 1994, [ ] Mexico s foreign currency reserves dropped from a high of $29.3 billion at the end of February to $25.9 billion at the end of March to $17.7 billion by the end of April. 27 The outflows of capital were rapid and Mexico sought the assistance of the United States. On March 24, U.S. authorities agreed to make a shortterm credit facility available to Mexico, and the peso was allowed to depreciate approximately 1 percent against the dollar, combining with a 7 percent devaluation that had taken place in the month preceding the assassination. 28 In April, the North American Financial Group was established. This group included the finance ministers and central banks of the United States, Canada and Mexico, and in a trilateral agreement it made available to Mexico 22 Douglas W. Arner, The Mexican Peso Crisis: Implications for the Regulation of Financial Markets, 2 NAFTA L. & Bus. Am. Rev. 28, 34 (1996) Burton Kirkwood, The History of Mexico 209 (Greenwood Publishing Group, 2000). 25 Meyer, supra note 9, at Kirkwood, supra note 24, at Arner, supra note 22, at

7 BANKING REGULATION IN MEXICO... 9 a short-term credit facility of $6 billion from the U.S. and $1 billion from Canada. 29 Internally, the Bank of Mexico increased domestic interest rates from 10.1 percent on March 23 to 17.8 percent in April on short-term pesodenominated Mexican government notes (cetes) in order to reduce the outflow of capital. 30 To compound the problem, an unexpected rise in U.S. interest rates took place over 1994: the average of the three-month T-bill rate went from 3.02 percent to 5.64 percent between January and December. 31 By the end of 1994, with a new president, Ernesto Zedillo Ponce de León ( ), and capital leaving rapidly, it was clear that Mexico was headed for a crisis. The initial actions, or inactions, by the new administration further complicated events. The president s consideration of military action against the EZLN movement caused further uncertainty and he was informed that because of the Chiapas situation, investors moved about one billion dollars out of Mexico in a single day. 32 The peso was devaluated on December 20th 33 which caused more reserve loss and finally the Mexican government was forced to freely float its currency on December 22nd. 34 Mexico was about to default on its dollar-indexed and dollar-denominated debt. The economy plummeted. Mexico s response was to turn to the international community for assistance. Its new NAFTA partner, the United States, with the push of President William Clinton moved quickly to assemble a loan-guarantee package for Mexico. On January 12, 1995, Clinton proposed a $40 billion loan package as Mexico continued on its free fall. 35 However, he did not have support from Congress. Consequently, on January 31st, Clinton announced a $51 billion rescue plan for Mexico. 36 He was able to accomplish this under his executive authority and the plan consisted of the following: the U.S. Treasury line of credit was extended to $20 billion, by means of the U.S. Exchange Rate Stabilization Fund; a $10 billion increase in the IMF standby agreement was announced, for a total of $17.8 billion; the pledge made by the BIS was doubled to $10 billion; and $3 billion from commercial banks was confirmed. 37 The package raised controversy, particularly the $20 billion for the U.S. Exchange Rate Stabilization Fund and the $10 billion from the IMF. Debate ensued at Carlos M. Urzúa, Five Decades of Relation between the World Bank and México, in 2 The World Bank: Its First Half Century 100 (D. Kapar & Webb comps., Washington: Brookings Institution Press, 1997). 32 at Arner, supra note 22, at Sidney Weintraub, Financial Decision Making in Mexico, To Bet a Nation 117 (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2000). 36 Urzúa, supra note 31, at at 106.

8 10 MEXICAN LAW REVIEW Vol. IV, No. 1 because four-fifths of the Fund was committed and, according to the rules, it surpassed the IMF credit limit of $7.2 billion. 38 Despite the disagreement, the plan was endorsed. International assistance came with a price. Mexico had to meet certain conditions, such as developing an economic plan. On March 9, 1995, Mexico released this new plan, with the goals to restore financial stability, strengthen public finances and the banking sector, regain confidence, and reinforce the groundwork for long-term sustainable growth. 39 Some conditions are mentioned below. Ultimately, the peso crisis and the need for international assistance did bring some lessons. The main lessons of the recent Peso Crisis of are that responsible financial and government leaders on both sides of the border failed to provide reasonable foresight, judgment, and supervision. 40 The Mexican government failed to foresee that the flow of incoming capital could easily change its direction, as it did, and in the United States, little attention was paid to these risks, as Wall Street and other financial interests got involved in the speculative fever of a Mexican and emerging markets investment boom. 41 Both the U.S. government and the Mexican government failed to supervise. Top U.S. financial and trade officials largely left Mexico-U.S. trade investment flows to the marketplace, and to the Mexican government s policy-makers. 42 The consequences of such failure led to high unemployment, inflation, a sharp increase in non-performing loans and finally to the banking crisis and the bailout that followed. 2. The Banking Crisis and Bailout In retrospect, in 1995, given the conditions of the peso crisis and the recent privatization of the banks, a perfect storm was brewing for a banking crisis. The exact causes leading to it are still subject of debate. However, some authors contend that the privatization of the banks produced disastrous results. Some observers, particularly those who were directly involved in the 1991 sale of the banks, attribute the collapse of the banking system to a macroeconomic shock in , whose features included a balance of payment crisis, the collapse of the exchange rate, and the skyrocketing of interest rates. 43 Nevertheless, a second, competing view, argues that the macro 38 at Arner, supra note 22, at William A. Lovett, Lessons from the Recent Peso Crisis in Mexico, 4 Tul.J.Int l&comp.l. 143, 149 (1996) Stephen Haber & Shawn Kantor, Getting Privatization Wrong: The Mexican Banking System , in World Bank Documents, Nov. 10, 2003,

9 BANKING REGULATION IN MEXICO shock of only hastened the collapse of a banking system that was already in serious trouble. In this view the design of Mexico s bank privatization was fundamentally flawed. 44 Stephen Haber and Shaw Kantor concur with the second view and claim that even had there been no peso crisis of , the Mexican banking system would have collapsed. 45 According to Haber and Kantor, the collapse was forthcoming for several reasons. The banks were already amassing large portfolios of non-performing loans, whose collateral proved to be unrecoverable; banking institutions were undercapitalized as well as inefficient, and did not operate according to international standards. 46 They trace the flaws of the privatization process to three inter-related features of Mexico s political economy: The first factor, limitless discretion of the government, generated a high risk environment for bankers, because one president could expropriate at will and the next could then privatize the banks. The second component, the government s desire to maximize revenues, led to two governmental strategies that would later become a problem. One strategy was to signal to potential bidders that they would not have to operate in a highly competitive environment and the other was the structure of the auction rules themselves. 47 Experience in banking was not a factor in deciding how to allocate banks to private investors. 48 Winners were decided only on the price offered by bidders. Additionally, Mexico s accounting rules were not in conformity with internationally accepted accounting standards, which made the market value of the banks higher. Lastly, the third factor, government s low capacity to enforce contract and property rights, also led to deficiencies. Investors in the banking sector had overpaid and wanted to recover their investments, but, as they quickly found out, they neither had mechanisms to assess the credit worthiness of borrowers nor did they have the ability to enforce their contract rights once loans went bad [ ]. 49 An inefficient judicial system contributed to more risks for bankers. Default risk could not be assessed because there was no private credit reporting in Mexico. All of these factors created a high risk environment. In addition to this, the banks themselves piled on more risks. Aggressive competition among banks, specifically in loans, also contributed to the problem. For example, the loans for housing and real-estate from December 1991 to December 1994 nearly tripled. 50 Non-performing loans increased as well. In December 1991 the ratio of non-performing to total loans was 3.6 percent. By December 1992 the ratio had climbed to 4.7 percent, and by De at 18. at 2. at 7. at 11. at 13.

10 12 MEXICAN LAW REVIEW Vol. IV, No. 1 cember 1994 had reached 6.1 percent. 51 Aggravating this situation was the inability of bankers to repossess the collateral on past due loans due to the lack of enforcement of property rights. Finally, the exchange rate collapsed in December 1994, capital flight was rampant, and banks could no longer sustain the pressure. The banks failed. The 1995 banking crisis was similar to other banking crises. Common characteristics were: a massive expansion of credit in a short period of time, poor bank management, supervisory and regulatory loopholes, and a shock (both domestic and external). 52 Sidaoui claims that it was precisely the weakness of the financial system and the loopholes within the regulatory and supervisory frameworks that exacerbated its aftermath. Additionally, he further states that the unlimited deposit insurance scheme, which protected all banks liabilities without any restriction, induced moral hazard and increased the cost of banking resolution. 53 Poor banking skills and conflicts of interests, specifically related to lending, were also contributing factors according to Sidaoui. He highlights the conclusions found by R. La Porta et al., 54 on related lending and the crisis. Sidaoui claims that related lending increased the severity of the crisis. Like Haber and Kantor, Sidaoui claims that the judicial system was inefficient. Many loans were written off because of the issues directly related to the inefficient judicial and regulatory procedures that involved the recovery of loans from bankrupted companies. The legal framework proved to favor debtors over creditors. 55 The government s response to the banking crisis came through a series of actions, including the development of programs to restructure consumer and commercial payments, to provide new banking capital, and to reform laws to allow investment in the financial sector. Preventive measures were also taken on the domestic financial markets to avoid contagion, by means of a rescue package in support of banks and borrowers alike, and prevent a widespread collapse of financial institutions. 56 One such program consisted of an injection of loans in U.S. dollars made by Banco de México [the Mexican central bank] to banks so they could fulfill their obligations and renew their loans at José J. Sidaoui, The Mexican Financial System: Reforms and Evolution , 28 BIS Papers 277 (Aug. 7, 2006), (last visited May 15, 2011). 53 at See R. La Porta, F. López-de-Silanes & G. Zamarrita, Related Lending, 118 Quarterly Journal of Economics, (2003) Guillermo Ortíz Martínez, What Lessons Does the Mexican Crisis Hold for Recovery in Asia?, 35 IMF Finance and Development 2 (1998), ortiz.htm (last visited May 20, 2011). 57 William Gruben & John H. Welch, Distortions and Resolutions in Mexico s Financial System, in Changing Structure of Mexico, Political, Social, and Economic Perspectives, 72 (Laura Randall ed., Sharpe, 1996).

11 BANKING REGULATION IN MEXICO This was to be done through the Fondo Bancario de Protección al Ahorro [Banking Fund for the Protection of Savings, FOBAPROA], which was created by the Salinas administration as a contingency fund to face extraordinary financial problems in times of economic crisis created by bank insolvency due to noncompliance of bank debtors and a massive withdrawal of funds. 58 The FOBAPROA received capital from a World Bank loan that will be discussed below. The use, or misuse, of this bailout fund was the cause of much debate within Mexico when the banks debts were passed on to the taxpayers in Other programs initiated in 1995 included the Apoyo Inmediato a Deudores de la Banca [Immediate Support Agreement to Bank Debtors, ADA] and the Unidades de Inversiones [Investment Units, UDIs]. The first program, the ADA, offered immediate interest rate relief for up to 18 months and allowed longterm debt restructuring. 59 The second program was designed to assist mortgage holders and small business by establishing a repayment schedule based on inflation-indexing terms, thus reducing the cash flow burden on borrowers. 60 Programs for raising capital were also initiated. One such program was the Programa Emergente de Capitalización Temporal or PROCAPTE [Emergent Program for Temporary Capitalization]. Under this program troubled banks could raise capital by creating and selling subordinated debentures (bonds) to the nation s deposit insurance, FOBAPROA. 61 Additionally, many other programs were initiated to support debtors during this time. 62 The above-mentioned programs were administered through the FO- BAPROA, which was supposed to put the banking industry back on track. However, it is argued that the opaque nature of the process left a large cloud of doubt, making it appear that assistance had been designed more to legalize and cover up malfeasance than to actually put the banking system back on its feet. 63 The aid process turned out to be more of a cover-up operation than a serious attempt to root out fraud. A large part of the non-performing loans which the government purchased were delinquent, often due to an intentional refusal by large industrial and financial groups to pay back loans 58 See Elvia Arcelia Quintana Adriano, Aspectos legales y económicos del rescate bancario en México 76 (UNAM, 2003). For a full discussion of the use, or misuse, of the FOBAPROA, see also Sigmond, supra note 1, at John A. Adams, Mexican Banking and Investment in Transition 127 (Quorum Books, 1997) See Banxico, Reformas al Sistema Financiero [Financial System Reforms], (last visited May 10, 2010). 63 Irma E. Sandoval, Financial Crisis and Bailout: Legal Challenges and International Lessons from Mexico, Korea, and the United States, in Comparative Administrative Law (Susan Rose-Ackerman & Peter L. Lindseth, eds., Edward Elgar Publishing, 2010).

12 14 MEXICAN LAW REVIEW Vol. IV, No. 1 instead of a real inability to pay on the part of small- and medium-sized debtors. 64 In the end, the cost of the bailout was passed on to the taxpayers by executive actions that converted the FOBAPROA s liabilities into public debt. This was done despite constitutional restraints for acquiring debt and, therefore, many argue, illegal 65 and with a huge fiscal cost International Loans and Conditions for Reforms The role of the international loans in the reform of the Mexican financial system played a key part. The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (World Bank) made several loans to Mexico with the objective of strengthening the financial system. 67 The first loan to support the restructuring of Mexico s financial sector was for the amount of US$1,000 million 68 and the objectives established in the loan proposal were designed to: (a) Restore the solvency and soundness of Mexico s banking system and improve confidence in the financial system; (b) Reform accounting standards and prudential regulations for banks, and strengthen supervision to prevent a future recurrence of systemic problems; (c) Improve management of the provision of liquidity on behalf of the Banco de México and development banks; and (d) Initiate reforms in the accounting practices and regulation of financial groups. 69 The proposed loan would support actions to: [ ] (a) Determine the health of the banking system through an intensive inspection of commercial banks and a review of the situation of banks entering the temporary capitalization program (PROCAPTE); (b) Restructure banks that have experienced exceptional decapitalization; (c) Initiate reforms to accounting standards and prudential regulations for banks; 64 at See Quintana, supra note 58, at 76 (according to Article 73 of the Mexican Constitution, if the Federal Government had been acquiring debt during the bailout process, then Congress should have approved it, which was not the case). 66 Sandoval, supra note 63 (originally, the cost of the bailout was supposed to be between 5 and 8 percent of the GDP in 1995, but ended up reaching 20 percent). 67 The World Bank, Financial Sector Restructuring Adjustment Loan, (last visited May 10, 2010). 68 ; see also Inter-American Development Bank, Report No. PIC2076 (Inter-American Development Bank is processing a parallel Sector Adjustment Loan amount of US$750 million under similar terms). 69

13 BANKING REGULATION IN MEXICO (d) Strengthen bank supervision; (e) Improve the regulatory framework to facilitate corporate work-outs and debt restructuring; [ ]. 70 Several World Bank documents associated with this loan include further conditions for the Mexican government 71 that would have a long term impact. In the context of the IMF, the set of conditions that apply to loans is what is commonly referred to as «IMF conditionality» 72 and are basically policy prescriptions. The policy prescriptions contained in IMF-supported programs essentially serve to provide the safeguards that the country will be able to rectify its macroeconomic and structural imbalances, and will be in a position to service and repay the loan. 73 Much has been written on whether these conditions are impositions and whether they in fact work. 74 In the case of Mexico, a strong argument can be made that policy recommendations did work for the financial system, given the performance of the banks during the most recent crisis. However, not all scholars view international organizations, their loans and policy recommendations as seeking to prevent financial failures. One such scholar, Robert J. Barro, raised controversy in his viewpoint piece titled The IMF Doesn t Put out Fires, it Starts Them. 75 In his note he states that with the help of the United States, the IMF encourages bad economic policy by rewarding failure with showers of money. 76 In particular, in the Mexican Mess as he calls it, the IMF-U.S. lending package was effectively a reward for corrupt and risky bank lending and poor macroeconomic policies. 77 He further states that the bailout that followed kept foreign lenders whole and became a liability for Mexican taxpayers. Furthermore, the real shame of the Mexican bailout is that it was judged by many observers to be a success, mainly because the U.S. Treasury got repaid ; see also Guarantee Agreement L3911, Financial Sector Restructuring Loan (June 23, 1995); Loan Agreement L3911 Financial Sector Restructuring Loan (June 23, 1995); Mexico Financial Sector Restructuring Adjustment (Sept. 5, 1997). 72 Moshin S. Khan & Sunil Sharm, IMF Conditionality and Country Ownership Programs (IMF, Sept. 24, 2001) See Williamson, supra note 15 (In Williamson s paper on the Washington Consensus, he refers to Washington as including international financial institutions [i.e. the IMF and the World Bank] and their suggested policy reforms. Thus, the conditions placed also follow the same theme). 75 Robert J. Barro, The IMF Does not Put out Fires, it Starts Them, Business Week, Dec. 7, 1998, at 18, available at pdf (last visited June 29, 2011)

14 16 MEXICAN LAW REVIEW Vol. IV, No. 1 Despite conflicting opinions, the peso crisis, the bank bailout and the conditions imposed by international loans prompted a series of regulatory changes that sought to consolidate the Mexican financial system and prevent future meltdowns. 4. Reforms in Mexican Financial Laws 79 The first set of reforms was published on February 15, As a whole, these were intended to strengthen the structure of financial institutions and their organization, as well as to improve their performance. The immediate intent was to stabilize the national economy and create policies that would lead to future growth. In order to carry out the above objectives, capital for financial institutions was needed. The government, therefore, initiated a set of reforms that would strengthen and modify the share structure of financial institutions in order to allow access to national and international investment. The modifications discussed below sought to increase investment and the development of strategic alliances that would lead to increased levels of efficiency in the financial system. 80 For banking institutions, reforms to laws that regulate the financial system were crucial. First, six articles in the Ley de Instituciones de Crédito [Credit Institutions Law, LIC] 81 dealing with shareholder structure were modified. 82 All the modifications had a common denominator: to increase the ability of Mexican and foreign investors to hold shares, in greater percentages, in Mexican banks. An injection of capital was much needed and this was one way of reaching that goal. The Ley del Mercado de Valores [Securities Market Law] 83 was also modified to allow more investment in securities markets. The reforms made in 1995 gave more access by abrogating certain government limitations on foreign investment in brokerage houses. 84 Due to this modification, foreign investment was opened for certain shares that had previously been closed For an in depth study of banking regulations and reforms, see Jesús de la Fuente, 1 Tratado de derecho bancario y bursátil, seguros, fianzas, organizaciones y actividades auxiliares del crédito, ahorro y crédito popular, grupos financieros (Porrúa, 2002). 80 See Banxico, supra note Ley de Instituciones de Crédito [Credit Institutions Law], Diario Oficial de la Federación [D.O.], July 19, Julio de 1990 (Mex.). 82 The articles modified were articles 11, 13, 14, 15, 17 and Ley del Mercado de Valores [Securities Market Law], as amended, Diario Oficial de la Federación [D.O.], Feb. 15, 1995 (Mex.). 84 See id. article See id. article 28 bis 7.

15 BANKING REGULATION IN MEXICO The Ley para Regular las Agrupaciones Financieras [Law to Regulate Financial Groups] 86 was also modified in February As with the above laws, the means by which this was carried out was by increasing the percentage of certain shares that could be held by foreign investors. Additionally, pursuant to the Law to Regulate Financial Groups, new rules were issued for the establishment of credit bureaus. This was an important step towards reducing risks in the future. Prior to these rules, banks were making loans without a full assessment of the risks, which often led to nonperforming loans. Thus, the capability of carrying out credit background checks was vital. Furthermore, institutional reforms were also made in In order to strengthen the supervision of the financial institutions the Ley de la Comisión Nacional Bancaria y de Valores [Law for the National Banking and Securities Commission, CNBV] was implemented. 87 Previously, there had been two separate commissions, one for overseeing the securities market and another for the banking industry. With this new law, both were consolidated into a single commission. The new commission was given additional authority to establish preventive corrective programs or agreements, which were of mandatory compliance for financial entities, and focused on eliminating financial imbalances that could affect liquidity, solvency or stability. 88 Further authority was given to the CNBV to issue prudential rules to preserve the liquidity, solvency and stability of the intermediators. 89 The new rules included rules for the diversity of risks, capitalization and the creation of preventive provisions. Finally, with the new consolidated structure, the capacity for supervision and oversight was strengthened. The hope was that with this new commission preventive actions could be taken with greater ease and speed in order to avoid complete meltdowns in times of financial crisis. Further reforms to the financial laws were published in the D.O. in November These reforms were made to strengthen the protection of public interests and the modification of stock structure for certain financial intermediators, as well as to adopt measures that contribute to preventing and combatting money laundering. 90 For such purposes, several modifications were proposed and a motion passed to update the LIC and the law regulating the stock market. The primary objective was to grant more powers to the CNBV to effectively protect consumers of bank and credit services by allowing the CNBV to review the different contract models so as to verify that confusing 86 Ley de la Comisión Nacional Bancaria y de Valores [Law for the National Banking and Securities Commission, CNBV], Diario Oficial de la Federación [D.O.], Feb. 28, 1995 (Mex.) See id. article See id. article Banxico, supra note 62.

16 18 MEXICAN LAW REVIEW Vol. IV, No. 1 clauses that hindered the consumers from understanding the extent of the obligations agreed to were not contained in contracts. 91 Modifications to the NAFTA were also made. In February 1995, foreign companies that could establish banks, subject to the approval of the Finance Ministry, would be allowed to acquire between 51 and 100 percent of the controlling interest in an individual bank, with some exceptions. 92 The protective measures established in NAFTA were removed. The Foreign Investment Law 93 was also modified. Article 7 of this law regulated and restricted foreign investment in financial activities. In 1993, up to 30 percent foreign investment was allowed in multiple bank credit institutions. 94 After the bank crisis, this article was reformed on several occasions, raising the percentage, until the restriction was completely repealed and up to 100 percent foreign investment was allowed. Despite the fact that 1995 had a shocking beginning in Mexico, by the end of that year, the dust was beginning to settle. Massive amounts of money were being injected into the financial system, legal reforms were made to financial laws, bailout funds were being disbursed, and credit programs were in place. On November 14, 1995, Michel Camdessus, Managing Director of the IMF, commented on Mexico s economic policy of that year stating that: The health of public finance has been restored, the necessary external adjustment has taken place, and the country has regained its access to the international capital markets. Although economic conditions remain difficult, growth is expected to resume, and the markets will stabilize as economic agents become convinced of the authorities policy commitment. 95 Additionally, he defended the actions of the IMF in the large loan arrangement made for Mexico. He argued that [a] decade of unstinting international efforts to open markets and liberalize emerging economies would have been at risk. Instead, Mexico was able to address its problems, to put itself back on the path of recovery, while at the same time limiting the negative impact of the crisis on other countries. 96 On the other hand, some authors state that the process of deregulating the banking system, through financial reforms, deepened the banking crisis. 97 Alicia Girón and Noemí Levy find that the privatization process of the Adams, supra note 59, at Ley de Inversión Extranjera. 94 See id. article 7 III (b). 95 Michel Camdessus, International Monetary Fund News, Address at the Zurich Economic Society, The IMF and the Challenges of Globalization The Fund s Evolving Approach to its Constant Mission: The Case of Mexico (Nov. 14, 1995), available at mds/1995/mds9517.htm (last visited May 15, 2011) Alicia Girón & Noemi Levy, México: los bancos que perdimos (UNAM, 2005); see

17 BANKING REGULATION IN MEXICO early 1990s led to the foreignization of the banking system and the disappearance of credit channels by cancelling a regulated financial system without the construction of other channels of credit. 98 Their studies conclude that the foreignization process rapidly increased, without increasing efficiency and productivity in the banking industry, and without carrying out its primary function: the issuance of credit. 99 Therefore, according to these authors, the banking sector has since then failed to contribute to the economic growth of Mexico. Nonetheless, others hold that foreign participation has essentially rebuilt the sector, improving capitalization and the quality of bank assets and contributing to the accelerated decline in bad loans. Since 2004, foreign participation has helped to increase bank credit in the economy. 100 Then again, one must look to the type of credit (private industry, credit for consumption, housing, to name a few) referred to by the authors on both sides because if we look at private industry credit, both agree it remains stagnant. 101 IV. Global Financial Crisis, The most recent global financial crisis began in 2007 and became evident in This section will review the causes that led to this phenomenon and then ground the analysis in the Mexican context. The external causes and impacts in Mexico and the government and banks initial response will be mentioned. Given the proximity of the events, it is too soon to tell what the long term impacts will be. 1. The 2008 Crisis In the most recent financial crisis, most analysts point their fingers towards the United States. The causes of the crisis are still being debated as some experts point to some factors, while others highlight different ones. One author claims the following: also L. M. Galindo & C. Guerrero, El impacto de la liberalización financiera sobre el ahorro privado en México, , in De la desregulación financiera a la crisis cambiaria: experiencias en América Látina y el sudeste asiático (G. Mántey & N. Levy eds., UNAM, 2000). 98 at See id. at 79; Salinas, supra note 14, at 172 (Carlos Salinas de Gortari, the president that initiated the privatization movement, later laments the foreignization of banks. He states that this loss of the system of payments to foreigners is a loss of Mexican sovereignty, similar to other historical moments such as the loss of half of the Mexican territory to the United States in 1847). 100 Rubén Hernández-Murillo, Experiments in Financial Liberalization: The Mexican Banking Sector, 89 Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Review (2007). 101 Another set of important reforms took place which provided further prudential oversight and best practices for the banking sector. See De la Fuente, supra note 79.

18 20 MEXICAN LAW REVIEW Vol. IV, No. 1 The candidate causes of the economic and financial crisis of fall into four broad categories: (1) macroeconomic failures, which have three subcategories: monetary and fiscal policies, global imbalances, and housing booms; (2) failures of financial-sector supervision and regulatory policies and practices, which have innumerable subcategories; (3) excesses of poorly understood innovations in financial engineering, which have several subcategories: subprime mortgages, credit default swaps, and new forms of securitization to name a few; (4) excesses, or imprudence, on the part of large private financial institutions, in particular those with a global reach. 102 Once the crisis became evident, the spillover effects began. In an economy so closely tied to the U.S. market, Mexico quickly felt the crunch. Manufactured goods and petroleum exports decreased. 103 The remittances sent to Mexico from Mexican workers in the United States also dropped. 104 Volatility in the exchange rate of the peso was observed. The stock market also took a hit. Overall, economic growth expectations dissipated. 2. Comparison of 1995 Crisis to that of 2008 Analysts have now taken to the task of studying the recent crisis and questioning what was similar or different from previous crises. Already, we are beginning to see some common factors arise. The crisis had four features in common with other crises: 1) asset price increases that turned out to be unsustainable; 2) credit booms that led to excessive debt burdens; 3) buildup of marginal loans and systemic risk; and 4) the failure of regulation and supervision to keep up with and get ahead of the crisis when it erupted. 105 On this occasion, the crisis began in the United States, with housing prices increasing in excess of 30% in the five years preceding the crisis and peaking six quarters prior to the onset of the crisis. 106 Credit expansion in the United 102 Edwin M. Truman, Lessons from the Global Economic and Financial Crisis (Peterson Institute for International Economics, 2009). 103 See Guillermo Ortiz, La crisis de y la actual crisis, CNN Expansión, Feb. 3, 2009, available at Total Mexican exports to the United States went from 223,403.6 million dollars in 2007 to 184,878.5 million dollars in See e. g., Secretaría de Economía, nomia-snci.gob.mx/sphp_pages/estadisticas/cuad_resumen/expmx_e.htm (last visited May 5, 2010). 104 On January 27, 2009, Banco de México published a statement indicating that family remittances had dropped 3.6% from 2007 to 2008, from 25, 145 million dollars, for a loss of 931 million dollars. See, e.g., Banco de México, Las remesas familiares en 2008, banxico.org.mx/documents/%7bb7cbcfaf-ab7d-be65-f78f-6827d524c418%7d.pdf (last visited May 10, 2010). 105 Stijn Claessens et al., Lesson and Policy Implications from the Global Financial Crisis (IMF Working Paper WP/10/44, 2010). 106

19 BANKING REGULATION IN MEXICO States, particularly in the subprime mortgage segment, was also a contributing factor, as well as the fact that those housing loans were being made to high risk borrowers. The U.S. government s prudential oversight of financial innovation was insufficient. As happened often before, the focus of authorities remained primarily on the liquidity and insolvency of individual institutions, rather on the resilience of the financial system as a whole. 107 As we can observe, some of the above-mentioned factors were present in Mexico s 1995 crisis. Common factors include: low international interest rates and investors search for better rates; a wide availability of resources that promoted unmeasured growth of credit in a context of deficient banking practices; serious deficiencies in banking oversight and regulation; problems of opaqueness in the information; incentives that prompted financial institutions to take excessive risks; a financial crisis characterized by problems of systemic liquidity and solvency; direct intervention in several financial institutions by the authorities and a complicated political environment to implement the measures required to support the financial system. 108 Two salient common factors are the expansion of credit and the failure of regulation and supervision. Credit expansion, both in mortgages and credit cards was observed, as was an increase in non-performing loans. The new Mexican banks in 1994 were all too eager to offer credit and risk assessment was not the top priority. This has similarities with the subprime mortgage lending that took place in the United States. In both contexts, the banks were left unsupervised which led to catastrophic results and eventually huge bailouts at the taxpayers expense. In response to the subprime mortgage crisis, on October 3, 2008, U.S. President George W. Bush signed the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act (EESA), which contains the Trouble Asset Relief Program (TARP). 109 As stated in the EESA, the aims of the TARP are: (1) To immediately provide authority and facilities that the Secretary of the Treasury can use to restore liquidity and stability to the financial system of the United States; and (2) To ensure that such authority and such facilities are used in a manner that (A) Protects home values, college funds, retirement accounts, and life savings; (B) Preserves homeownership and promotes jobs and economic growth; (C) Maximizes overall returns to the taxpayers of the United States; and (D) Provides public accountability for the exercise of such authority Ortiz, supra note 103. Trouble Asset Relief Program (TARP) (2008).

20 22 MEXICAN LAW REVIEW Vol. IV, No. 1 With the passage of this act, the Treasury Secretary was authorized to spend up to US $700 billion and under Section 101, had the authority to establish the Troubled Asset Relief Program (or TARP ) to purchase, and to make and fund commitments to purchase, troubled assets from any financial institution, on such terms and conditions as are determined by the Secretary, and in accordance with this Act and the policies and procedures developed and published by the Secretary. Stated simply, the government would buy toxic mortgage assets and other bad debts made by the financial institutions that took on the risk and then passed the burden of those bad choices to the taxpayers. The TARP was highly criticized for diverse reasons. First, Henry Paulson, the Secretary of the Treasury who made the initial proposal and headed the Bush financial team at the time of the financial meltdown, had formerly been the CEO of the Goldman Sachs Group. Goldman Sachs was not only a contributor to the crisis, but later benefitted from the bailout. 110 Thus, conflicts of interests concerns started even before the law was passed and claims were made that Paulson would help out his old friends. 111 Other scandals, dealing with excessive bonuses to top executives at financial institutions receiving TARP funds, soon came to light. 112 Consequently, the new Barack Obama Administration, similar to the Ernesto Zedillo Administration, inherited the crisis and then had to clean up the mess and put new regulations into place. The most recent piece of legislation that responds to the financial crisis in the United States is the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, which was signed into law on July 21, The aim of the legislation is to promote the financial stability in the United States by improving accountability and transparency of its financial system, to end the too big to fail, to protect the American taxpayer by ending bailout, to protect consumers from abusive financial services practices, and for other purposes. 114 It is a comprehensive law that includes the creation of new agencies to in- 110 Goldman Sachs received $10 billion from the Treasury and then wanted to return the money because of restrictions placed by TARP. See Christine Harper, Goldman Sachs wants to Repay Treasure, CFO Says, Bloomberg, Feb. 4, 2009, available at ps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=a7vrpwuhek3k. 111 See Ben White, Details of Rescue Plan Unclear, but Some Already Benefit, N. Y. Times, Sep. 19, 2008, available at See also Helene Cooper, Obama orders Treasury Chief to Try to Block A.I.G. Bonuses, N. Y. Times, Mar. 16, 2009, available at 112 See Liam Pleven, AIG to Pay $450 Million in Bonuses, Wall St J., Mar. 15, 2009, available at 2AIG+to+Pay+450+Million+in+Bonuses% The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, Pub. L (2010). 114 See One Hundred Eleventh Congress of the United States of America, at the Second Session, H.R. 4173, Jan. 5, 2010, 111_cong_bills&docid=f:h4173enr.txt. pdf (last visited May 25, 2011).

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